Having a strong internal locus of control means believing events in your life are primarily the result of your own actions.
It’s funny
to think about how you didn’t even know what a locus of control was two months
ago, and now it’s possibly one of the most important things in your life.
You’ve had this image in your head for the longest time. You’re standing on the
sidewalk on a crowded street with the wind blowing through your hair and the
sound of traffic horns wreaking havoc on your eardrums, and you’re happy. Now,
it’s a reality, and you’re not quite sure how you got here.
You
remember sending in the application and prepping for the exam. You don’t think
you could ever forget that. The planners, the notes, the *cough* legally
downloaded textbooks, the study techniques, the time blocks. You’d never
studied this hard before and a part of you wondered whether this would even be
worth it. After all, you were smart but you weren’t that smart, were you? Your
fears were realised twenty minutes into the exam and when you walked out of
that hall, you’d resigned yourself to the fact that four months of blood, sweat, and tears were going to amount to nothing. That’s why you didn’t tell anyone
when the results were going to come out. You’d check it yourself, process the
disappointment, and laugh it off when the inevitable sympathy started pouring
in. That was the plan and it was a good one. Of course, all of that changed
when you first saw your name. You vaguely remember hearing your voice going,
“Oh my god, I got in” and then you were almost suffocated by the group hug that
followed.
There were
a lot of things to plan after that and you never really stopped to think about
how much your life was going to change. You visited the hostels, bought your
supplies, and sat through all of the lectures on responsibility and before you
knew it, you were sitting in your hostel room, in a city that was a state away
from the bedroom you grew up in. Your diaries are still in your cupboard, your
guitar is still lying in the corner of your room, collecting dust and you
can’t do your fit checks in your dressing table mirror anymore. Instead, you’ll
be here, drinking tiny cups of coffee and listening to popstar music on the way
to college. It’s a life you chose to build and now that you made your dream a
reality it’s time to go find a new one.
Going to use this as a reminder when I finally move out
ReplyDeleteAs you should
DeleteI feel like there's a video idea in here somewhere
ReplyDeleteSo proud of you Nic!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Kim :)
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